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1.
Turk Thorac J ; 22(4): 289-296, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35110245

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to present the concrete impact of air pollution and tobacco use on lung disease by using a data engineering approach and acquired datasets. MATERIAL AND METHODS: To demonstrate the relationship between the air pollution and the tobacco use with the lung diseases, various relevant datasets are acquired. These datasets present not only Turkey but also worldwide situation. Datasets used in this study present the population, industrial growth, number of motor vehicles, forest area size, tobacco use rate, air pollution, number of death due to asthma, lung disease, tobacco use and air pollution. In total, 10 different datasets are gathered to prove our objective. To achieve our objective with the acquired materials, a data engineering approach is adopted. From a data engineering point of view, each dataset represents a variable for the calculation. With the data science engineering techniques used in this study, existing relations between these variables are clearly stated. Besides, with this information, a cause-consequence matching is achieved as well. In this study, covariance, correlation analyses are executed on the datasets. Moreover, multi-linear regression is performed for the forecasting. RESULTS: Relations between the various datasets are explored and results are divided into 3 clusters based on the relations. Among the explored relations, the most significant relation is discovered between the tobacco use rate and its effects on death rates. This relation is measured around 93-94%, which can be considered as a high risk. CONCLUSION: Results show the concrete impacts of deforestation on air pollution, increase in tobacco use especially in easy ages causes lung disease in worldwide. These results indicate a global warning about various senses: the importance of the forest area size to balance the air quality, regulations about the number of motor vehicles, and the tobacco selling to young people are highly required.

2.
Turk Thorac J ; 21(6): 419-432, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33352098

ABSTRACT

It has been more than 3 months now since the first case of COVID-19 was reported in Turkey. Globally, the number of confirmed cases and deaths reached 9,653,048 and 491,128 respectively, as reported by 216 countries by June 27, 2020. Turkey had 1,396 new cases, 194,511 total cases, and 5,065 deaths by the same date. From the first case until today, the Turkish Thoracic Society (TTS) has been very proactive in educating doctors, increasing public awareness, undertaking academic studies, and assisting with public health policies. In the present report, social, academic, and management perspectives of the pandemic are presented under appropriate subtitles. During this critical public health crisis, TTS has once again demonstrated its readiness and constructive stance by supporting public health, healthcare workers, and the environment. This review summarizes the perspective of TTS on each aspect of the COVID-19 pandemic and casts light on its contributions.

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